Pubdate: Wed, 13 Dec 2006 Source: Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) Copyright: 2006 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.winnipegsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/503 Author: Robert Marshall Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) MAKE NOISE FOR REAL JUSTICE Jubilee Shootings Latest In Litany Of Violence Against Police Last week's shootings left three Winnipeg police officers -- Curtis Penner, Don Murray and Jeremy Cull -- seriously wounded. It hit home for cops across the country, and me. I know two of them. I worked extensively with one and watched his contagious enthusiasm as he busted his rear end working three shifts in a cruiser car. Watched his corny impersonations for whoever would watch. His propensity for joking, though, pales in his dedication to the job, his colleagues and the public he serves. I watched as he filtered up to detective work. As he gained that experience he just became better and better. He's currently assigned to the street crime unit, the latest incarnation of the highly touted, much welcomed Clean Sweep project. Clean Sweep came into existence as the result of last year's senseless killing of Phillipe Haiart, shot dead by a stray bullet intended for someone else. Success is Clean Sweep's mark. Ironically, the circumstances that now mark that unit are as insane as its raison d'etre. Really, though, is anybody surprised? They shouldn't be. The levels of violence perpetrated against others across this country are beyond serious. Violence toward cops is out of control. But as Winnipeggers hear, read and talk about the shootings their message is clear. This is the catalyst for change in Canada's justice system. A catalyst. Yeah, right. How about Schiemann, Johnston, Myrol and Gordon? I thought those four Mounties from Mayerthorpe lit the fuse of change in 2005. Closer to home, Strongquill from western Manitoba was supposed to mean something in 2001. Or Portage la Prairie's Templeton, shot in the face, left to die at the side of the road in 2002. All vehicles to inspire change. A switch to a Conservative government has brought strong efforts toward a long-overdue shift. Changes that would put some teeth and guts back into our jelly-like system. So where are those changes today? Where else? Held up by parliamentary committees and hindered by opposition parties that won't support them. In their zeal to get elected last time around, Liberals and the NDP promised the moon and pledged a new era of "get-tough," but as usual instead of stepping up to the plate, they've withered. Federal Liberal Anita Neville's riding covers the Jubilee Avenue shooting scene. I wonder what she thinks of her party's record on such issues. Deep down. Where's her post-shooting commentary? The Clean Sweep initiative and the wounded officers are pretty clear and compelling evidence of the Winnipeg Police Service's dedication to the community. Why are so many others in the system, charged with making the community safe, quite content to fiddle in ivory towers while everything around them burns? The dangling threads of this investigation, if followed, will lead to those negligent places of power. Such neglect is reckless and irresponsible. And it must end. Now. This story is about alleged drug dealing that was ongoing from the comfort of a home in an average neighbourhood, where legal consequence translated to "who cares." And ends with a will to kill in the name of protecting the business. A shotgun ambush. It's nuts. Absolutely maniacal. Extreme levels of violence are used with rapidly increasing frequency on innocent victims and cops alike. The Winnipeg Police Service and Winnipeg Police Association have been beating that drum for a long time. The injuries sustained by our officers are life altering. For them, their families and their squad. Winnipeg is bigger than Mayerthorpe. We should be able to make more noise. Penner, Murray and Cull should hear that noise on their long painful road of recovery. And it should be heard all the way to Ottawa - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom